| Literature DB >> 25156527 |
Natalie Walker1, Vanessa Johnston2, Marewa Glover3, Christopher Bullen4, Adrian Trenholme5, Anne Chang6, Peter Morris2, Catherine Segan7, Ngiare Brown8, Debra Fenton5, Eyvette Hawthorne9, Ron Borland10, Varsha Parag4, Taina Von Blaramberg4, Darren Westphal2, David Thomas11.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Secondhand smoke (SHS) is a significant cause of acute respiratory illness (ARI) and 5 times more common in indigenous children. A single-blind randomized trial was undertaken to determine the efficacy of a family centered SHS intervention to reduce ARI in indigenous infants in Australia and New Zealand.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25156527 PMCID: PMC4282121 DOI: 10.1093/ntr/ntu128
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nicotine Tob Res ISSN: 1462-2203 Impact factor: 4.244
Figure 1.Flowchart of recruitment and retention of participants throughout the trial (New Zealand and Australia combined).
Baseline Characteristics of Infant and Mother (New Zealand and Australia Combined)
| Variables | Intervention group, | Usual care group, |
|---|---|---|
| Infants: female | 58 (40) | 68 (46) |
| Infants: mean age at baseline, weeks ( | 6.3 (2.7) | 6.0 (2.7) |
| Infants: country | ||
| New Zealand | 108 (74) | 108 (73) |
| Australia | 37 (26) | 40 (27) |
| Infants: mean gestational age at birth, weeks ( | 39.3 (1.3) | 39.3 (1.5) |
| Infants: mean birth weight, kilograms ( | 3.3 (0.5) | 3.3 (0.6) |
| Infants: unwell since birtha | 44 (30) | 36 (24) |
| Infants: coughing | ||
| No daytime cough | 111 (77) | 119 (80) |
| No nighttime cough | 123 (85) | 128 (87) |
| Mothers: mean age at baseline in years ( | 26.8 (6.5) | 25.3 (5.8) |
| Mothers: highest level of education | ||
| ≤Secondary school | 104 (72) | 114 (77) |
| TAFE/polytechnic/university | 41 (28) | 34 (23) |
| Mothers: marital statusb | ||
| Married/defacto/living with partner | 72 (50) | 91 (62) |
| Divorced/separated/widowed | 8 (6) | 20(14) |
| Never married | 44 (30) | 25 (17) |
| Refused to answerc | 21 (15) | 12 (8) |
| Mothers: breast feeding state | ||
| Yes—exclusive | 43 (30) | 49 (33) |
| Yes—full | 29 (20) | 31 (21) |
| Yes—partial | 42 (29) | 40 (27) |
| No | 31 (21) | 28 (19) |
| Mothers: smoked during pregnancy | 114 (79) | 105 (71) |
| Mothers: reduced amount smoked during pregnancye | 74 (65) | 71 (68) |
| Mothers: current smoking status | ||
| Current smoker | 105 (72) | 88 (60) |
| Ex-smoker | 22 (15) | 37 (25) |
| Never smoked | 18 (12) | 23 (16) |
| Mothers: frequency of smokingf | ||
| At least weekly | 95 (90) | 83 (94) |
| Less than weekly | 10 (10) | 5 (6) |
| Mothers: number of cigarettes smoked per dayf | ||
| ≤10 | 54 (51) | 63 (72) |
| 11–20 | 38 (35) | 20 (23) |
| 21–30 | 6 (6) | 2 (2) |
| ≥31 | 1 (1) | 1 (1) |
| Missing data | 6 (6) | 2 (2) |
| Mothers: time to first cigarettef | ||
| ≤30min of waking | 48 (49) | 31 (37) |
| >30min of waking | 50 (51) | 53 (63) |
| Mothers: quit attempt in last 12 monthsf | 49 (47) | 44 (50) |
| Mothers: mean self-efficacy score ( | 3.3 (0.8) | 3.3 (0.8) |
| Household: mean crowding index ( | 2.0 (0.7) | 2.0 (0.7) |
| Household: mean number of children in house aged under 5 years ( | 1.9 (1.0) | 1.9 (1.0) |
SD = standard deviation; TAFE = Technical and Further Education Institution.
aThe specific question was “Has your infant been unwell and needed to go to the health clinic, general practitioner or hospital since he/she was born?”
b X 2; p = .002.
cAll but three participants were from New Zealand. In New Zealand, different levels of social support are offered depending on marital status. It is likely that some women in the study did not wish to disclose their marital status, in case their access to certain social support was jeopardized.
dDefined as the number of people currently sleeping in the house divided by the number of rooms in the house where people were sleeping
eIn those that smoked during pregnancy.
fIn current smokers.
gBelief in their ability to quit this time, measured on a scale of 1–5, where one was very low and five was very high.
Secondhand Smoke Exposure Over Time (New Zealand and Australia Combined)
| Baseline | 4 Months | 12 Months | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intervention, | Usual care, | Intervention, | Usual care, | Intervention, | Usual care, | |
| Full smoking ban in home | 136/145 (94) | 141/148 (95) | 125/134 (93) | 123/132 (93) | 117/126 (94) | 120/128 (95) |
| Smoking ban in car | 140/145 (97) | 143/148 (97) | 130/134 (97) | 129/132 (98) | 119/126 (95) | 123/128 (97) |
| Mother is current smoker | 105/145 (72) | 88/148 (60) | 94/134 (70) | 78/132 (59) | 83/126 (66) | 70/128 (55) |
| Mother smokes ≤20 per day | 92/105 (88) | 83/88 (94) | 87/94 (93) | 74/78 (95) | 73/83 (88) | 64/70 (91) |
| Partner is current smokera | 83/116 (72) | 81/122 (66) | 75/109 (69) | 72/108 (67) | 59/99 (60) | 72/109 (66) |
| Infant is breast fedb | 114/145 (79) | 120/148 (81) | 83/134 (62) | 87/132 (66) | 34/126 (27) | 34/128 (27) |
| Members of the household smoke inside | 13/145 (9) | 11/148 (7) | 10/134 (8) | 13/132 (10) | 10/126 (8) | 7/128 (5) |
| In last seven days, infant has been cared for in another place where people smokec | 16/145 (11) | 26/148 (18) | 10/134 (8) | 11/132 (8) | 13/126 (10) | 10/128 (8) |
| In last seven days, infant has been around tobacco smokec, d | 17/145 (12) | 20/148 (14) | 14/134 (10) | 10/132 (8) | 23/126 (18) | 15/128 (12) |
| In last seven days, infant has been near (within arm’s length) of an open fire for cooking or heating or camp firec | 5/145 (3) | 6/148 (4) | 11/134 (8) | 5/132 (4) | 2/126 (2) | 7/128 (5) |
| In last seven days, infant has been near (within arm’s length) of people smoking cannabisc | 0/145 (0) | 3/148 (2) | 3/134 (2) | 1/132 (1) | 0/126 (0) | 1/128 (1) |
| Geometric mean cotinine/creatinine ratio (ng/mg)e | 157.6 | 112.2 | 84.8 | 47.5 | 25.0 | 21.8 |
aIn those mothers with partners.
bDefined as breast fed exclusively, fully, or partially.
cDefined as number of infants with ≥1 day of exposure.
dDefined as in the same room with someone that is smoking, in a car with someone smoking, or sitting outside within arm’s length of someone who is smoking—includes when holding the infant.
eReadings of ≥30ng/mg indicate secondhand smoke exposure.
Figure 2.Cotinine/creatinine ratio in infants’ urine, according to feeding status over time.